Mocking Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., for her inane words and actions is evolving into a sport, which is the price the Bronx nitwit pays for her undying thirst for attention.

Ocasio-Cortez did a bizarre Instagram Live video last week pontificating on life while kneeling on the floor, eating popcorn and drinking wine. And to prove she is talented, she did it all while building IKEA furniture.

Saturday Night Live in its heyday couldn’t have come up with better material.

Talking while her mouth is full of popcorn, the democratic socialist declared that your grandchildren will hate you for not backing her radical Green New Deal and that U.S. officials on the border are “deliberately” trying to “cage children and inject them with drugs” because “of their national origin.”

But that was just the tip of the iceberg, as she compared Republicans to the possessed girl in “The Exorcist,” saying their negativity is like “vomiting pea soup.” Responding to a few inquires, Ocasio-Cortez absentmindedly wiped her greasy popcorn hands on her pants as she answered — she even picked up a dropped popcorn kernel from the floor and put it back in the bowl.

And social media delivered, as seen in a contribution from The Daily Caller’s Jessica Fletcher, who offered a hilarious take as “a new girl in D.C.”

“So, I have some furniture to put together and I guess that means I have to sit on the floor and record myself,” she begins. “While telling you how much your future grandkids are going to hate you, even though I believe the world is going to end in 12 years, which means you couldn’t possibly have grandchildren.”

But the mocking was not limited to her Instagram Live video, as seen in the offering below from comedian Alyssa Limperis, who played up Ocasio-Cortez’s meeting last week with the cast from “Queer Eye,” who were in D.C. to advocate for the Equality Act, and the Violence Against Women Act.

The longest-tenured writer at BizPac Review, Tom grew up in Maryland before moving to Central Florida as a young teen. It is in the Sunshine State that he honed both his passion for politics and his writing skills.